Dart v. Minnesota Loan & Trust Co.

77 N.W. 288, 74 Minn. 426, 1898 Minn. LEXIS 950
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedDecember 5, 1898
DocketNos. 11,269—(106)
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 77 N.W. 288 (Dart v. Minnesota Loan & Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dart v. Minnesota Loan & Trust Co., 77 N.W. 288, 74 Minn. 426, 1898 Minn. LEXIS 950 (Mich. 1898).

Opinion

START, C. J.

This action, so far as it affects the appellant, the Minnesota Loan & Trust Company, is for the recovery of $1,400 and interest, being the amount of a mortgage made by Ole Olson and wife on his farm to the trust company on July 1, 1889, on the ground that there was no consideration therefor.' The mortgagor, Ole Olson, executed the mortgage to the trust company to secure a loan to him of $1,400, which it agreed to make. It accepted the mortgage, and thereafter [427]*427sold and assigned it for value to its codefendant, the Westerly Savings Bank. The mortgagor claimed that the trust company never paid to him, or to any one for him, any part of the loan, and assigned all his rights in the premises to the respondent, Dart, who had become the owner of the farm. ’ The trust company alleged in its answer that it paid to the mortgagor the full amount of the $1,400 so loaned to him. The trial court submitted the question of such payment to the jury, who found that the trust company did not pay the $1,400, or any part thereof, to the mortgagor.

The court made findings of fact as to the other issues in the case, and incorporated therein the finding of the jury on the question of payment, and as a conclusion of law directed judgment in favor of the plaintiff for $1,400 and interest from the time of the delivery of the mortgage.

The trust company appealed from an order denying its motion for a new trial.

The contention of the trust company is that the finding as to the nonpayment of the $1,400 is not sustained by the evidence. Much of the evidence on this question is undisputed, and, except as specially stated, there is no dispute as to the following facts: On July 1, 1889, Messrs. Stevens & Co., a copartnership consisting of Hamlet Stevens and H. S. Branham, were bankers in good financial standing at Litchfield. Ole Olson, the plaintiff’s assignor, was then the owner of the farm described in the complaint, and was then owing one of the firm — H. S. Branham — $800 and interest for a tree claim on the land, and $157.97 and interest to the Meeker County Bank. •

The trust company was then engaged in the business of making farm loans, and Stevens & Co. were its agents for that purpose a.t Litchfield, and Olson applied through them for a loan of $1,400, to be secured on his farm, for the purpose of paying his debts. He executed a note and mortgage on his farm to the trust company to secure it for that amount, which were forwarded by Stevens & Co. to the trust company a.t its place of business at Minneapolis. Accompanying this was an order designated in the record as “Exhibit 2,” signed by Olson, which was in these words:

[428]*428“$1,400. Litchfield, Minn., July 8th, 1889.
Upon completion of my loan and the receipt of all papers required in connection therewith by you, pay the sum of fourteen hundred dollars, which sum I acknowledge to be the full amount due me from you to close said loan, to the order of Stevens & Co., of Litchfield, Minn., whom I hereby appoint my agent to receive for me said sum, and whose indorsement on this draft shall be full receipt to you from me, and shall discharge you from all liability to me on account of said loan. ' Ole Olson.”

The trust company, after the receipt of this order, paid to Stevens & Co., on their order, $1,400, the full amount for which the mortgage was given. It offered evidence on the trial tending to show that it relied upon Exhibit 2, and that, except for it, payment would not have been made to Stevens & Co. The evidence was excluded, and the trust company excepted. The ruling was error, and, for the purpose of determining the question now under consideration, it must be assumed as a fact that the trust company did make the payment in reliance on Exhibit 2.

After the money was received by Stevens & Co., they paid therefrom for insurance on the mortgaged premises $18.50; Olson’s debt to the bank, including interest, $164.77; his debt and interest to Branham for the tree claim, $915.45. Olson substantially admitted on the trial that the payment for him to the bank of the $164.77 was authorized, but he denied any right of Stevens & Co. to pay the other claims. Some 18 months after the money was paid to Stevens & Co. by the trust company, and in December, 1890, Branham died, the firm was declared' insolvent, and Olson abandoned the farm and left the state.

The plaintiff became the owner of the farm in the year 1892, and February 15, 1895, procured an assignment from Olson of his alleged claim against the trust company, and commenced this action one month thereafter, which was the first notice or knowledge that it ever had that Olson claimed that it had never paid to him the $1,400 secured by his mortgage.

If Exhibit 2, upon which the trust company relied in paying the money to Stevens & Co., was binding upon Olson, it necessarily follows that the finding of the court and jury is not sustained by the evidence. He admits that he signed the order Exhibit 2. There [429]*429was evidence on the part of the defendant to the effect that this order was explained to Olson before he signed it, but this was contradicted by Olson. His testimony as to the execution of the order is substantially this:

“Q. Did you know at that time anything about the English language? A. No. Q. [Showing witness Exhibit 2.] A. Yes, that is my name. Q. Do you know when you signed that? A. No, not exactly what time that was I signed the note. Q. Do you know what that paper is? A. A note. Q. Do you think that is a note? A. Yes, that is what I think. Q. Did you ever hear this paper read? Did you hear it read here in court? A. No, never. Q. Do you know Mr. Danielson’s handwriting? A. Yes, that is his handwriting all right enough. Q. [Exhibit 2 read to witness.] A. Yes, that is the receipt on the money, — to show I got the money. Q. No, that is the paper that the money should be paid to Stevens & Co. Have you heard of that paper before? Have you ever heard it read before? A. No. Q. Do you remember of Mr. Danielson asking you to sign that? A. No, I don’t remember it; but I signed it that time I signed the mortgage. Q. What, if anything, did he tell you you had to sign this paper for? A. He didn’t tell me anything. * * * Q. Who was present at the time you signed this, — who was there? A. There was nobody around there, only me, and Mr. Danielson, and my wife. Q. State whether or not Mr. Danielson told you what this paper was. A. No. Q. What did Mr. Danielson say to you, if anything, about this paper? A. He didn’t say anything. Q. Did he ask you to sign it? A. He just gave me the papers to sign them; that is all. Q. What, if anything, did he say at that time was the reason he wanted you to sign this paper? A. He didn’t say anything. Q. State what conversation you had, if any, with Mr. Danielson about signing the papers authorizing the Loan & Trust Company to pay this money to Stevens & Co., — what talk, if any, you ever had with Danielson? A. I never had any talk about that.”

On his cross-examination he testified as follows:

“Q. At the time this loan was made, who did you ask the Minnesota Loan & Trust Co. to send this money to? A. There was nothing talked about that. Q. Who did you want it sent to? A. I wanted the money myself, — wanted it sent to me. Q. Did you expect them to send it up to you? A. Yes, sir. Q. At Bosendale, did you? A. No, I expected it to be sent to Stevens & Company’s bank. Q.

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Related

Sooner v. Goetze
224 N.W. 697 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1929)
Rosenberg v. Nelson
177 N.W. 659 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1920)
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138 N.W. 775 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1912)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
77 N.W. 288, 74 Minn. 426, 1898 Minn. LEXIS 950, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dart-v-minnesota-loan-trust-co-minn-1898.